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Willard Mack

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Years active
  
1913–1934

Plays
  
The Noose

Education
  
Georgetown University

Role
  
Actor

Name
  
Willard Mack


Willard Mack httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Full Name
  
Charles McLaughlin

Born
  
September 18, 1873 (
1873-09-18
)
Morrisburg, Ontario, Canada

Occupation
  
Actor, director, playwright

Died
  
November 18, 1934, Brentwood, California, United States

Spouse
  
Pauline Frederick (m. 1917–1920), Marjorie Rambeau (m. 1913–1917), Beatrice Banyard (m. ?–1934)

Movies
  
A Free Soul, Broadway to Hollywood, Voice of the City, The Dove, Old Clothes

Similar People
  
Marjorie Rambeau, Pauline Frederick, Adela Rogers St Johns, Roland West, Lou Tellegen

The Voice of the City (Preview Clip)


(for fellow actor also born 1873, but not a relative, see Wilbur Mack)

Contents

Willard Mack Willard Mack IMDb

Willard Mack (September 18, 1873 – November 18, 1934) was a Canadian-born actor, director, and playwright.

Life and career

He was born Charles Willard McLaughlin in Morrisburg, Ontario. At an early age his family moved to Brooklyn, New York. After two years, they moved to Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where McLaughlin finished high school. His parents returned to Canada, but he went on to study at Georgetown University in Washington, D. C., where he became involved in student plays. Adopting the stage name Willard Mack, after graduation he took minor acting jobs for a few years and did Shakespearian repertoire. However, writing scripts was what he was most interested in, and his second effort, about the North-West Mounted Police, In Wyoming, was a commercial success and was later the basis for his film Nanette of the Wilds.

Throughout his life, Mack frequently returned to Canada. Some of his other plays, including Tiger Rose and The Scarlet Fox, were set in northern Alberta. In 1914 he made his acting debut on Broadway in a play he had written. Over the next fourteen years, he would write a further twenty-two Broadway productions, acting in ten of them and producing four. For a time, Willard Mack operated a stock company with actress Maude Leone. In the mid 1920s, he met an aspiring stage actress named Ruby Stevens hired as a chorus girl for his new play. Mack coached Stevens's acting and rewrote parts of the play to expand her role and then persuaded her to change her name to Barbara Stanwyck.

During his time on Broadway, Mack began writing for motion pictures, and although he performed in fifteen films and directed four, he was primarily a writer. At first he remained on the east coast but later moved to Los Angeles. A number of his plays were made into motion pictures, and between 1916 and 1953 he was involved with the writing of more than seventy film scripts. Starting out in silent film, he made his talkie debut as actor, director, and co-writer of the 1929 film Voice of the City. In 1933 he directed What Price Innocence?. He then wrote and directed Broadway to Hollywood, a backstage musical that spanned nearly five decades recounting the struggles of a vaudeville family.

In 1913, he married actress Marjorie Rambeau. Divorced in 1917, he immediately married actress/dancer Pauline Frederick, whom he had met a year earlier while appearing in a film with her. That marriage was short-lived, ending in divorce in 1919.

His writing success made him a wealthy man. He died in Brentwood, Los Angeles, California in 1934.

Plays

  • Nanette of the Wilds (1916)
  • The Noose (1926)
  • Filmography

    Writer
    1953
    Broadway Television Theatre (TV Series) (play - 2 episodes)
    - The Noose (1953) - (play)
    - The Kick-In (1953) - (play)
    1953
    The Girl Who Had Everything (play - uncredited)
    1939
    The Girl and the Gambler (play "The Dove")
    1936
    I'd Give My Life (based on the play: "The Noose" by)
    1936
    The Drag-Net (play)
    1935
    Together We Live (original story and screenplay)
    1934
    Nana
    1933
    Broadway to Hollywood (screen play)
    1933
    What Price Innocence? (original screenplay)
    1933
    Song of the Eagle (additional dialogue)
    1933
    Night of Terror (story "The Public Be Damned")
    1933
    Strictly Personal (screenplay)
    1933
    The Billion Dollar Scandal (writer)
    1932
    Girl of the Rio (play "The Dove")
    1931
    Sidewalks of New York (dialogue - uncredited)
    1931
    High Stakes (based on play by)
    1931
    Sporting Blood (screenplay)
    1931
    A Free Soul (play - uncredited)
    1931
    Kick In (play)
    1931
    Luigi La Volpe (story)
    1931
    Monsieur Le Fox (story)
    1930
    Monsieur Le Fox (story)
    1930
    Billy the Kid (uncredited)
    1930
    Olimpia
    1930
    Men of the North (story)
    1930
    Caught Short (dialogue) / (story)
    1930
    Lord Byron of Broadway (scenario)
    1929
    Tiger Rose (based upon a play by)
    1929
    It's a Great Life (dialogue)
    1929
    Untamed (dialogue)
    1929
    His Glorious Night (writer)
    1929
    Madame X (dialogue)
    1929
    The Voice of the City (screen play) / (story)
    1928
    Sharp Tools (Short) (writer)
    1928
    Hangman's House (uncredited)
    1928
    The Book Worm (Short) (by)
    1928
    The Noose (play)
    1927
    The Dove (from the play by)
    1925
    Old Clothes
    1925
    The Monster (scenario)
    1925
    The Rag Man (story)
    1924
    Little Robinson Crusoe (screenplay) / (story)
    1924
    Welcome Stranger (adaptation)
    1924
    Daring Love (adaptation)
    1923
    Tiger Rose (play)
    1923
    Applesauce (Short) (scenario)
    1923
    Your Friend and Mine (play)
    1922
    Kick In (play)
    1920
    Heritage (story)
    1920
    The Common Sin (story)
    1920
    The Valley of Doubt (story)
    1920
    Blind Youth (play)
    1919
    One Week of Life (scenario)
    1919
    Shadows (screenplay) / (story)
    1918
    Go West, Young Man (screenplay) / (story)
    1918
    The Hell Cat (screenplay) / (story)
    1918
    Laughing Bill Hyde (adaptaion)
    1918
    The Witch Woman (story)
    1918
    The Wasp (story)
    1917
    Who's Your Neighbor? (story)
    1917
    The Woman Beneath (story)
    1917
    A Wife's Suspicion (Short) (story)
    1917
    Aladdin's Other Lamp (play "The Dream Girl")
    1917
    Yankee Pluck (story)
    1917
    The Highway of Hope (story "Lonely Lou")
    1917
    The Grip of Love (Short) (story)
    1917
    Two Men and a Woman (story)
    1917
    Kick In (play)
    1917
    A Woman Alone (story "Loneliness")
    1916
    A Child of Mystery
    1916
    Mixed Blood (story)
    1916
    All Man (story)
    1916
    Nanette of the Wilds (story)
    1916
    A Gutter Magdalene (story)
    1916
    Her Maternal Right (scenario)
    1916
    The Saleslady (story)
    1916
    The Lost Bridegroom
    1916
    The Dragnet (Short) (scenario)
    Actor
    1935
    Together We Live as
    Hank
    1933
    Disgraced as
    Martin - Defense Attorney (uncredited)
    1933
    What Price Innocence? as
    Dr. Dan Davidge
    1929
    The Voice of the City as
    Biff Myers
    1923
    The Dangerous Maid as
    Sergeant Kick
    1923
    Your Friend and Mine as
    Ted Mason
    1919
    The Woman on the Index as
    Hugo Declasse
    1916
    Nanette of the Wilds as
    Constable Thomas O'Brien
    1916
    The Conqueror as
    Mark Horn
    1916
    The Corner as
    John Adams
    1915
    Aloha Oe as
    David Harmon
    1915
    The Edge of the Abyss as
    Jim Sims
    1913
    The Battle of Gettysburg as
    Undetermined Leading Role (unconfirmed)
    1913
    Wild Man for a Day (Short) as
    The Wild Man (as William Mack)
    Director
    1935
    Together We Live
    1933
    Broadway to Hollywood
    1933
    What Price Innocence?
    1929
    The Voice of the City
    Script Department
    1932
    Prosperity (continuity - uncredited)
    1931
    Reducing (dialogue continuity)
    1930
    Caught Short (continuity)
    1930
    Lord Byron of Broadway (dialogue continuity)
    Miscellaneous
    1934
    Nana (dialogue director)

    References

    Willard Mack Wikipedia


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